Pages

September 8, 2008

G143: Red Sox 3, Rays 0

The Red Sox are only 0.5 GB the Rays in the East -- with 19 games to go in the regular season.

Boston scored three quick runs off Jackson in the first and Lester (7.2-6-0-3-9) and Jonathan Papelbon (1.1-1-0-0-3, 18) made it stand up.

Mark Kotsay walked on five pitches. Dustin Pedroia lined out to second, as Akinori Iwamura dove to his right and snared the ball. David Ortiz doubled off the Wall in left-center, scoring Kotsay. Kevin Youkilis lined a single to center, as Jackson had to duck to avoid being hit, scoring Flo, but was caught in a run down trying to get to second base. Jason Bay followed with a solo home run off the light tower in left-center.

Lester allowed only one Tampa Bay runner to reach second base through the first five innings. After seven innings, he had thrown 105 pitches and seemed done for the night, but he was back out on the hill for the eighth. Lester got the first two outs before allowing a single to Ben Zobrist and a ground-rule double to Carlos Pena. With the tying run at the plate -- Rocco Baldelli -- Terry Francona called on Papelbon.

Bot struck out Baldelli to end the threat. It was also the Tampa Clipper's fourth whiff of the night, earning him the Golden Shower. In the ninth, Papelbon allowed a two-out single to pinch-hitter Eric Hinske, but struck out Gabe Gross to preserve the shutout.

It was the first time Tampa Bay was shutout in consecutive games since April 28-29, 2004 -- and those whitewashes were also at Fenway Park.

Coco Crisp went 3-for-3 with a stolen base and Kotsay added two singles to his first-inning walk.

In other games, the Angels routed the Yankees 12-1. The Central-leading White Sox and Blue Jays were rained out in Chicago.

Jackson lasted a season-low 3.1 innings against the Yankees in his last start, allowing 10 hits and six runs. In each of his four starts before that outing, he pitched at least six innings and allowed two or fewer runs. ... Lester has allowed a total of two runs in his last two starts (11.2 innings).

Tampa Bay activated third baseman Evan Longoria on Saturday. Longoria, who fractured his right wrist on August 8, says the pain is "very minimal" and the wrist is "almost 100 percent". ... J.D. Drew may return to the Red Sox lineup tonight.

All 12 meetings between the Red Sox and Rays so far this season have been won by the home team. There is a huge amount of pressure for the Rays this week. They were swept on the road by the Blue Jays -- the last two losses being a 13-inning heartbreaker and a 1-0 shutout. Now their lead is as low as it's been since July 28 -- and they are coming into Fenway, where the Red Sox are playing .716 ball (48-19, a 116-win pace).

We have definitely got to get one win there for sure and hopefully win the series. ... You have just got to treat it as any other kind of game if you can. It's not, but you have to just treat it like it's any other game.

The AL East upstarts continue to insist there is no need to panic and the next three games won't make or break their season, but they're more vulnerable now than at any time since the All-Star break and running out of margin for error.

"We know what we've got to do and they know what they've got to do," Rays starter Matt Garza said of the Red Sox. "Right now, we're up top. They're chasing us. We keep playing our ball and this thing will turn around. Right now we're in a little bit of a rut - what is that, five out of the last six? That's nothing bad." ...

The first challenge for the Rays the next three evenings will be keeping the games close. In going 0-6 at Fenway this season, the nearest the Rays have come to the Red Sox is three runs, in a 7-4 loss June 3. ... The Red Sox have averaged more than seven runs per game while hosting the Rays, outscoring Tampa Bay 45-16 in six meetings.

Tonight's starter, Edwin Jackson, has been among the primary culprits. In two losses at Fenway in May and June, Jackson allowed a combined 15 hits and 10 runs in nine innings.

The Rays insist they aren't doing anything differently, the pennant race isn't affecting them and, despite being swept by the Blue Jays and losing five of their past six, they aren't feeling any extra pressure going into tonight's opener of the showdown series in Boston.

At least, that's what they're saying.

The evidence, compounded by a 1-0 loss Sunday, says otherwise. They're not getting the big hits when they need them, they're making more mistakes and, most significantly, they're not winning like they did most of the past five months. ...

As much as they talk about how, with three weeks left, there is no reason to panic — manager Joe Maddon, perhaps symbolically, had a schedule in his hands during his postgame media session — they have reason to be wary of what lies ahead.

The Sox, with their top three pitchers lined up and their lineup fortified, have a chance to take over first place with a sweep, and Fenway Park — where the Rays haven't won since last September and will be playing for the first time since the June 5 brawl — will be ferocious the next three nights.

Tonight will be the 456th consecutive sellout crowd at Fenway Park, which will break Cleveland's major league record of 455 set from June 12, 1995 to April 2, 2001. The Red Sox's streak began on May 15, 2003.

314 comments:

We were at that game, though we'll be watching this one from home. At this point in the season, I start having to watch from the hallway, pacing and chewing my fingernails. I can't sit in front of the TV, but I can't bear not knowing what's happening!

Too bad that sucker-punching d-bag Gomes isn't even good enough to make the expanded roster. He needs to get a Paps 99mph pitch right into his piece of shit cheeseburger filled coronary artery.FUCK, I HATE HIM!

Honestly, it may be better not to get into these skirmishes. The last thing we need, especially after so many players have returned from the DL, is for a key guy to get hurt throwing punches or getting in a shoving match. Let the bats do the talking.

(Not that I wouldn't mind watching Lester drill Gomes in the ear... heh!)

Evening, everyone - back in Vegas from a week on the East Coast (NYC and VA - sadly, I didn't get a chance to see the Yankees at the Toilet one last time and laugh at their grave, so to speak). I saw that the Sox were 5-1 in that week I was away...maybe that should tell me something, I dunno. :p

Redsock said: "If DP hits #2 next year, I'll be royally pissed, because either Tito has truly gone insane or the team is so banged up, it was the only choice and we're likely out of the running anyway."

Redsock said: "If DP hits #2 next year, I'll be royally pissed, because either Tito has truly gone insane or the team is so banged up, it was the only choice and we're likely out of the running anyway."

The other night when after we finished Dustin told me how he was a little bit nervous about the MVP thing. He wants to do good to show people he isn't a fluke. I told him, as I stroked his hair, not to worry because he will always be my favorite bat.

You're a better man than me...baseball, and sports in general, has rarely taught me to expect greatness on a consistent basis. Only basketball really allows for that, IMO.

Just for the record - I'm sure we all want FY to be MVP this season, but is there a legitimate argument (either saber or traditional) that he deserves it? I'd love to hear it, just so I can pull it out if anybody tries to tell me I'm wrong when I say FY should win in a walk. ;)

O'Brien listing off an MVP fan poll on ESPN.com... FY was leading with Hamilton in second - he went down the list and then said, "I think John McCain is sixth, although I'm not sure how that happened."

I went through my brain, trying to figure out if there is a baseball player named John McCain. Then of course, it hit me. He was joking.

The other night when after we finished Dustin told me how he was a little bit nervous about the MVP thing. He wants to do good to show people he isn't a fluke. I told him, as I stroked his hair, not to worry because he will always be my favorite bat.

I'm sure we were all thinking that very sincerely. I assumed that you guys had lost a connection and that all those comments would come gushing out. then I saw a trickle of one or two and figured we'd all just gone lame.